Most of the academics I’ve heard discuss it go with the second pronunciation (soft “i” throughout) but it just looks to me like it should be a hard “i”.
To my mind it would get the “hard” power from the downstream “u”.
Also I’ve seen a presentation saying transcranial magnetic something or other can help reduce it. Basically you’ve got “phantom limb” symptoms for your damaged ear parts, and they were able to turn it off or down with magnets.
I’m just a dude from the USA and I use both pronunciations!
Tin-ite-us is my go to but I’m trying to get away from it. It makes it sound like it ends in “-itis” when I say it. This makes it sound like an inflammatory disease, which it isn’t necessarily.
Tinnit-us feels off to say, but it doesn’t imply the “-itis” part, so I’m going for it!
tin-ite-us or tinnit-us, everyone?
Most of the academics I’ve heard discuss it go with the second pronunciation (soft “i” throughout) but it just looks to me like it should be a hard “i”.
To my mind it would get the “hard” power from the downstream “u”.
Also I’ve seen a presentation saying transcranial magnetic something or other can help reduce it. Basically you’ve got “phantom limb” symptoms for your damaged ear parts, and they were able to turn it off or down with magnets.
The correct pronunciation is “tinnit-us”. “Tin-ite-us” comes from misinterpreting the “-itus” as “-itis”, meaning “inflammation of.”
I’m just a dude from the USA and I use both pronunciations!
Tin-ite-us is my go to but I’m trying to get away from it. It makes it sound like it ends in “-itis” when I say it. This makes it sound like an inflammatory disease, which it isn’t necessarily.
Tinnit-us feels off to say, but it doesn’t imply the “-itis” part, so I’m going for it!